My community, Sandhill Farm,
has maintained a core commitment to growing and eating high quality
food right from the first of our nearly 39 years together. As such,
imagine my amusement when my Seattle friend Marni Rachmiel suggested we
rendezvous for breakfast at the Portage Bay Café
last November—a place I'd never heard of before—and arrived to find the
coffee cups and waitstaff t-shirts festooned with the restaurant's
defiant slogan: "Eat Like You Give a Damn." I loved it!
It turns out that this hometown restaurant (it
has three locations in the metropolitan area) fiercely promotes local,
organic, and seasonal ingredients. It makes an organic farmer from
northeast Missouri proud.
Over the course of the decades I've lived at
Sandhill it's been a passion of mine to try to develop a local
cuisine—dishes that feature what we grow when it's fresh. We've achieved
year-round self-sufficiency in tomatoes, so red pasta sauce is always a
menu option. But not buying tomatoes means letting go of seeing fresh
wedges in the salad bowl from November through June, as we only have
canned and dried tomatoes available those months.
We eat parsnips in March and April. We eat
fresh strawberries only in June. Butternut squash lasts from first
harvest in the fall through to the spring. With care we can make our
fresh garlic and potatoes last pretty much all year; it's harder with
onions. We extend access to certain vegetables through pickling:
cabbage, cucumbers, carrots, beets, and green beans. Other things we
regularly dry: leeks, celery, peppers, shiitakes, jerky, and many herbs.
If you are what you eat, it makes sense to be
local and organic. Though without as much fanfare (and no t-shirts)
Sandhill stands for the same principles as the Portage Bay Café.
Further, we intentionally try to be conscious
of the energy it takes to get our food to the table, and that calculus
extends way beyond the propane that fuels our cook stove. It includes
the transportation it takes to get the food to the store and then home
(if we buy an ingredient rather than grow it), the energy invested in
processing the food (if we're not eating it fresh), and the energy
invested in storing the food (if it's refrigerated or frozen instead of
canned or dried).
In the summer we're able to save propane by
extensive use of a solar cooker—essentially an insulated box with
reflective sides that focuses the sunshine onto a cooking shelf. On
sunny days we can sustain a temperature of 250 degrees, great for slow
cooking or reheating things. In the winter we make the wood stove do
double duty as a space heater and a cooking surface. By keeping a
tea kettle on the wood stove all winter, it takes much less propane to
bring the water to a boil for hot drinks. These steps require a bit more
forethought, yet add up to considerable savings.
I've wondered for years what world politics would be like if everyone—and I mean everyone—had
a garden and was responsible for growing at least some portion of what
they ate. Would we be as warlike? Would we be as wasteful? Would we
tolerate so many food ingredients with four or more syllables? Would we
make so many development choices that destroy farmland? Would Monsanto
even have a chance to corner the market on germplasm? I doubt it.
Of course, when you think about it, giving a
damn in general is a good idea. Come by for dinner sometime and we can
talk it over.
Friday, January 11, 2013
Eat Like You Give a Damn
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